29.9.17

Students rally in Barcelona to defend Catalan vote

Students
carry a big Estelada (Pro-independence Catalan flag) as they march
during a pro-referendum demonstration called by students on September
28, 2017 in Barcelona. Thousands of students went on strike to the
streets of Barcelona today as part of the “permanent mobilization” of
the Catalan separatists, three days ahead of the referendum on
independence banned by Spanish justice. / AFP PHOTO / PAU BARRENA

At least 10,000 striking high school and university students rallied
in Barcelona on Thursday to defend Catalonia’s right to hold an
independence referendum which has been banned by Madrid.
The students, many draped in red and yellow Catalan independence
flags, gathered outside a building at the University of Barcelona in the
centre of the Catalan capital.
“We will vote!” and “Independence!” they chanted as they marched
along the Gran Via, one of Barcelona’s main avenues, blocking traffic.

“The majority of young people are separatists, and if they weren’t,
they have become separatist after seeing what Spain has done in recent
weeks,” 16-year-old high school student Aina Gomez told AFP.
Opinion polls show Catalans are split on the issue of independence,
but a large majority want to vote in a legitimate referendum to settle
the matter.
Over the past few days, judges and prosecutors have ordered the
seizure of electoral material including millions of ballot papers, the
closure of websites linked to the vote and the detention of key members
of the team organising the referendum.
The electoral board set up to oversee the vote has been dissolved,
and on Tuesday prosecutors ordered police to seal off places to be used
as polling stations and guard them until Sunday.
“If such a large number of people as exists in Catalonia want to
separate from the country, they have to be allowed to vote,” said
15-year-old student Pau Cabrinety.
Only six of the 30 students in his class at a Barcelona high school did not take part in the strike, he added.
Some students have said they may occupy schools and universities that
could be used as polling station in Sunday’s referendum in the wealthy
northeastern region of Spain which is home to some 7.5 million people.
Catalonia’s regional police force, the Mossos d’Esquadra, warned
Wednesday that there was a risk of a “disruption of public order” if
police sealed polling stations as they have been instructed to do.